Administration and society

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Also known as: Roma
Italian:
Roma

Government

The city, or comune (commune), of Rome is governed by a popularly elected communal council, a communal committee (an executive body), and a mayor. The mayor is elected directly through a two-round system. The council is responsible for such amenities as police protection, health services, transportation, and certain aspects of public assistance. The areas around the city, in Roma province, are governed by an elected provincial council, a provincial committee, and a committee president. Similarly, the government of the Lazio region comprises an elected regional council, a regional committee, and a committee president. The regional council passes laws and issues administrative regulations—subject to certain constitutional limitations—for the whole Lazio region.

Housing and education

The city that built some of the first apartment houses in the world (the insulae of ancient Rome) now suffers a perennial housing shortage. At the time of Italian unification in 1870, the population of the city was very low (about 226,000 inhabitants), and the landscape was marked by vast open spaces within the city walls. However, Rome’s status as the capital of a united Italy soon led to rapid expansion, and the 1880s were marked by a so-called “building fever.” Shantytowns occupied by poorer Romans soon sprang up in the rural-urban fringe known as the borgate romane. The exodus of lower-class Romans to the periphery was further encouraged by Mussolini, whose creation of grand boulevards in the city centre destroyed entire neighbourhoods there. Many of the numerous rural Italians who moved to Rome in the mid-20th century also crowded into the borgate. Some decent new housing was constructed on the outskirts—for example, the attractive working-class housing at Tiburtino, built in the early 1950s, and that in the vast EUR (Esposizione Universale di Roma; “Universal Exhibition of Rome”) complex, completed in the 1960s—but much of it was hastily built and substandard. The 1960s and ’70s saw the construction of a number of huge suburban public housing estates, such as Spinaceto and Corviale, but they suffered from relative isolation, and many viewed them as depressing eyesores. Meanwhile, a lack of administrative oversight meant that a significant proportion of houses within Rome were illegally built. More recent immigration from outside Italy has put further pressure on the inadequate housing stock.

The city’s preeminent institution of higher education is the University of Rome, founded in 1303 and known as La Sapienza. Its main buildings, the Città Universitaria, are located east of the Stazione Termini. A decentralization process begun in 1999 resulted in the creation of several “confederate” universities, which form part of the larger University of Rome but operate autonomously. Tens of thousands of students are enrolled in dozens of faculties and departments within the institution.

Blake Ehrlich John Foot

History

Rome of antiquity

Founding and the kingdom

Although the site of Rome was occupied as early as the Bronze Age (c. 1500 bc) and perhaps earlier, continuous settlement did not take place until the beginning of the 1st millennium bc. By the 8th–7th century bc, separate villages of various iron-using Indo-European peoples had appeared, first on the Palatine and Aventine hills and soon thereafter on the Esquiline and Quirinal ridges. The artifacts and especially the funerary customs of these communities indicate that, from the beginning, diverse culture groups—including Latins, Sabines, and perhaps others—played important roles in the formation of the future city.

With settlement of the valleys between the Palatine, Esquiline, and Caelian hills in the 7th century, independent villages began to merge. Before the end of the century, the valley of the future Forum, originally used as a cemetery, was partially drained and occupied by wattle-and-daub huts. The mixed agricultural and pastoral economies of the earliest settlements were slowly exposed to commercial contacts with both Etruscan and Greek traders. Although the ancient Romans dated the founding of their kingdom to 753 bc, the formation of a politically unified city probably occurred in the early 6th century bc, under the influence of the Etruscan city-states to the north. Under the rule of kings, traditionally seven in number (the last three probably Etruscans), Rome became a powerful force in central Italy.

During the regal period, social and economic differences began to shape the two classes, patrician and plebeian, whose struggles for political power dominated the early republic. The tribal organization of the populace was replaced by one based on military units, whose composition in the late regal period depended on property qualifications.

The early Roman Republic

The overthrow of the last Roman king and the establishment of the Roman Republic, either in 509 bc or a generation or two later, coincided with the decline of Etruscan power in central Italy. The new government under the leadership of two patrician consuls was at first a mixed blessing. Although Etruscan techniques and symbols survived in republican Rome, commercial ties with the Etruscans and with the Greek colonies in southern Italy gradually withered. During the ensuing economic crisis, grain shortages occurred, a problem that was to plague the city intermittently for a millennium and more; the government was forced to make purchases from as far away as Sicily.

Political upheaval followed economic depression. The first major confrontation between the patricians and plebeians in the mid-5th century led to the writing down of the customary laws in the Law of the Twelve Tables (451–450) and to the formation of a plebeian political organization whose leaders, the tribunes, acted to protect the plebeians from arbitrary patrician actions. In the last half of the 5th century, Rome began to expand its control over neighbouring territories and peoples, a process that culminated in the conquest of the Etruscan city of Veii in 396.

In 390 Rome suffered a disastrous check when a Gallic army laid siege to the city. After seven months, during which only the Capitoline remained in Roman hands, the Gauls were bought off but left Rome in ruins. The Romans set about reconstructing their city almost immediately, surrounding it with a continuous wall of huge tufa blocks. Later writers attributed Rome’s haphazard appearance to the rapid rebuilding during this period; the historian Livy described Rome as looking more like a squatters’ community than a planned one. For eight centuries, however, no foreign invader was to breach Rome’s walls.

The economic dislocation caused by the Gallic attack helped renew the conflict between the patricians and the plebeians; nevertheless, before the end of the 3rd century bc, through a series of judicious compromises, the plebeians had won access to all the offices of the state, and the actions (plebiscita) of the plebeian assembly had been made legally binding on all Romans. Economic legislation dealing with debt and land distribution was directed toward relieving the distress of the lower classes.